Sony Xperia E review: E-lementary
E-lementary
Phonebook
The visually customized phonebook of the Xperia E is virtually the same as on vanilla Android and can store extensive contact information. A tabbed interface allows you to access your contact list, recent calls, and info from social networking services.
The phonebook • The quick contacts can save you a click or two • The available options
The contact list can be sorted by either first or last name. There are two contact search options - a dedicated search field on top of the contact list, and an alphabet scroll to jump to names starting with a specific letter.
Quick contacts are enabled - a tap on the contact's photo brings up shortcuts for calling, texting or emailing the contact.
You can sync with multiple accounts, including Exchange and Facebook, and you can selectively show or hide contacts from certain accounts and SIM cards (you can fine-sift specific groups from an account), or set the phonebook to display only contacts with phone numbers or only contacts that are online.
Filtering contacts in the phonebook
If a contact has accounts in multiple services, you can "link" their details to keep everything in one place. Their Facebook photos and interests (part of the Facebook integration) will show as extra tabs.
Each contact can have a variety of fields (and repeat fields of the same type), there's an Add field button and the X button lets you remove fields as needed. The fields cover anything from names (including a field to write the name down phonetically) to addresses, nicknames and notes.
There is an option to redirect calls directly to voicemail, and custom ringtones are enabled too.
Standard telephony
Unlike its dual-SIM counterpart, the Xperia E has the standard telephony features. The signal strength is relatively strong and we had no issues with in-call quality.
Smart dialing is enabled and searches for matches in both the contacts' phones and names. The call log is integrated in the dialer - it shows a list of recently dialed, received and missed calls in the top half of the screen and the keypad on the bottom half. Once you start typing, the call log is replaced by the smart dial list. You can hide the keypad the make more room for the call log.
Smart dialing is available only for numbers
Thanks to the proximity sensor, the Sony Xperia E automatically disables the touchscreen when you place it next to your face during a call.
We ran our traditional loudspeaker test on the Sony Xperia E, and it scored an Average mark. It's just 1db below our Good result though and missed calls and notification are quite unlikely.
Speakerphone test | Voice, dB | Ringing | Overal score | |
Sony Xperia sola | 60.9 | 59.0 | 61.7 | Below Average |
Sony Xperia tipo | 65.7 | 61.7 | 71.8 | Below Average |
Apple iPhone 4S | 65.8 | 64.5 | 74.6 | |
HTC Desire C | 64.6 | 64.7 | 75.7 | |
Sony Xperia E (xLOUD) | 66.5 | 64.6 | 75.9 | |
Sony Xperia E dual (xLOUD) | 66.8 | 64.6 | 75.7 | |
Samsung Galaxy mini 2 S6500 | 69.7 | 66.6 | 71.5 | |
Sony Xperia miro (xLOUD) | 69.7 | 64.6 | 75.9 | |
Sony Xperia Go | 68.7 | 65.8 | 76.2 | |
Sony Xperia neo L | 65.8 | 65.4 | 76.9 | |
Motorola RAZR XT910 | 74.7 | 66.6 | 82.1 | Very Good |
76.6 | 75.7 | 84.6 | Excellent |
Messaging
Text messages and MMS use a standard threaded layout. Each thread is displayed as an IM chat session, with the most recent message at the bottom. You can manage individual messages (forward, copy, delete) and even lock them against deletion.
Search is enabled to locate a specific message in all conversations and you can also activate delivery reports.
Adding multimedia (photos, videos, sounds, etc.) will convert the message to an MMS.
Composing a message • Attaching an image automatically makes it an MMS
Moving on to email, the Gmail app supports batch operations, which allow multiple emails to be archived, labeled or deleted. The app supports multiple Gmail accounts, but there's no unified inbox for other email services.
Gmail app supports batch operations and multiple (Gmail) accounts
However, the generic email app can do that as well. It can handle multiple POP or IMAP accounts and you have access to the messages in the original folders that are created online.
The generic Email client has a combined inbox option
Google Talk handles Instant Messaging. The GTalk network is compatible with a variety of popular clients like Pidgin, Kopete, iChat and Ovi Contacts.
As for text input, the Xperia E offers a customized on-screen full QWERTY keyboard. Typing on the portrait keyboard is not as convenient as on some of the larger screens seen in the Xperia line, but is still fairly comfortable.
Flipping the phone to landscape gives you even bigger, easier to press buttons.
You can also try the so-called Gesture input if hitting those keys individually doesn't give you the desired typing speed. It works the same as Swype, and even if you've never used Swype input before, you'll quickly get used to it.
Reader comments
- limestone steve
- 01 Jun 2016
- Bw@
Cheap price so don't expect miracles Camera usable and limitations with storage You get what you pay for.
- AnonD-340973
- 12 Dec 2014
- mxv
Every time I log on facebbook it crashes and then restarts it self
- nE0n1nja
- 04 Oct 2014
- dMK
THis is a horrible phone! Why? It has 600 MB "Phone" memory, which is separate from the 2 GB internal memory. It fills up pretty damn fast and now I can't update any of my apps because I get "Insufficient storage space available" ...